Leading MEP Seb Dance calls on Labour MPs to "lead the conversation" and take a tougher stance against Brexit.

The Labour MEP told BI that his Westminster colleagues need to stand up for what they believe in.

"MPs are elected to lead. If we don't, we'll end up in a situation where whatever Farage, The Daily Mail and The Daily Express says will become the UK's direction of travel."

Dance shot to fame after publicly mocking former UKIP leader Nigel Farage in the European Parliament.

BRUSSELS, Belgium — Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party must "do the right thing" and take a much stronger stand against Theresa May's hard Brexit plan, one of the party's leading MEPs has warned.

Seb Dance, who is Labour's deputy leader in the European Parliament, shot to fame after holding up a sign reading "he's lying to you" behind Nigel Farage in the European Parliament in February last year. The picture, which instantly went viral on social media, made Dance a poster-boy for anti-Brexit campaigners.

Now in an interview with Business Insider, Dance says the national party needs to take a similarly bold position and be honest with voters about the damage that pursuing a hard Brexit would risk.

"I get what it's like when constituents come to you and give you a point of view that you don't agree with," Dance said.

"It's tempting to sit there and nod your head and say you'll sort it for them. But you've got to be honest with people.

"We've seen the government's assessment on what it would do for jobs in those areas. If MPs are telling people in those areas it's all going to be okay, and they end up losing their jobs and with a worse state of living, are they going to go back to their MPs and say 'thanks, that was great. At least we've got our sovereignty now'? Nonsense.

"The problem is that people don't accept they're going to be worse off. I can't stop trying to persuade them. But if they don't accept it then that doesn't mean MP should just go along with it anyway."

He added: "MPs are elected to lead. If we don't, we'll end up in a situation where whatever Farage, The Daily Mail and The Daily Express says will become the UK's direction of travel.

MPs are elected to lead. If we don't, we'll end up in a situation where whatever Farage, The Daily Mail and The Daily Express says will become the UK's direction of travel.

"Come on. That's not what the Labour Party believes in."

Dance told BI that he had sympathy for Labour MPs representing pro-Brexit regions, but said they were elected to "lead the conversation" and carry out what Labour "believes" in.

"I have massive sympathy. Of course, I get it. I talk to colleagues from Leave areas," the MEP for London said.

"I did a dinner in London with Ed Miliband and some other MPs from Yorkshire and the northwest recently. Ed said to me afterwards, 'that was a great speech but try giving it in Doncaster,' and I said yes, I'd love to!"

"With some honourable exceptions, I don't think there is anyone making this argument in places like Doncaster, Middlesborough and Sunderland."

Dance's comments come as pressure builds on Corbyn to back a softer Brexit position. The shadow Northern Ireland secretary Owen Smith has today called on Corbyn to back a second referendum on the terms of May's Brexit deal.

"Given that it is increasingly obvious that the promises which the Brexiters made to the voters, especially, not only their pledge of an additional £350m a week for the NHS, are never going to be honoured, we have the right to ask if Brexit remains the right choice for the country. And to ask, too, that the country has a vote on whether to accept the terms and true costs of that choice once they are clear."

Seb Dance MEP

"We are letting down the next generation"

The sign Dance used to mock Farage last year is now framed and sits behind the Labour MEP's desk. As we spoke, Dance spotted Farage on the television speaking to Sky News. "What the hell is he doing on TV?" he asked.

Dance stresses though, that his anger isn't just reserved for "nonsense" claims made by the former UKIP leader, but also for an "incredibly frustrating" ignorance among Westminster politicians towards what the EU actually is.

"Westminster is all about having a conversation about ourselves to ourselves. It's not that other colleagues here don't have the same problem. German colleagues often complain about the Berlin bubble.

"But there is a much, much better understanding of what the EU does in other member states," he said.

"We have an exceptionalism mentality. It's partly what drove the vote, among other reasons. I'm very proud to be British," he said, pointing at a Union Jack, "but I've also got a European flag and a London flag."

I'm very proud to be British," he said, pointing at a Union Jack, "but I've also got a European flag and a London flag."

"We have got to wake up to our position in the world. We have incredible advantages. We speak the world's language. We have a brilliant legal system. We are ideally placed for the next century," he added.

"But if we think we are bigger than we are, if we pretend that we can compete on the same level as China and the US, then we are delusional.

"And not only are we delusional, but we are letting down the next generation because we are not preparing them for the challenges ahead.

"The world is getting more and more global. Companies and individuals are going to have to compete with people in different jurisdictions and different cultures, and if we don't understand those cultures and — and this is where freedom of movement comes in — we are going to be at a huge, huge disadvantage.

"That's what worries me about this whole thing. Unless we have a sensible direction of travel, we will end up an isolationist and completely ill-equipped to deal with the challenges of the modern world. We can't do that."

"We'll never get out of transition"

The famous sign now framed in Seb Dance's office. Adam Payne / Business Insider BI interviewed Dance in Brussels where the European Council has today approved the latest details of Britain's Brexit Withdrawal Agreement, including a proposed 20-month transition period.

Earlier this week Brexit Secretary David Davis welcomed the agreement on transition as a "significant step" in negotiations — but Dance was in no mood to celebrate the progress

"We shouldn't be leaving like this," he said.

"Jumping off the diving board, pinching our nose and hoping for the best. It's mad. Absolutely mad. But that's where we are heading."

He believes the government has "no idea where we are going" once the transition period expires and is simply using the 20 months to further delay decisions on issues it has no solutions for, particularly the Irish border question.

"They're just kicking it down the road. They'll get to March 29th and say 'look we'll use transition to work out the details of options A and B but we won't need option C'. Of course they will."

Option C is the EU's suggestion that Northern Ireland could remain within the customs union and fully aligned to single market rules in order to avoid a hard border with the Republic.

We'll get to the end of transition and say 'hey, we are nowhere near ready to end this' and end up extending transition indefinitely.

The UK government has insisted that option C will not be required because an invisible border can be maintained either through a wide-ranging free trade deal (option A), or technical solutions (option B).

"We will always need it because that's the only practical and sensible universe that you and I are currently sitting in."

He also rubbished suggestions that EU member states would be willing to accept minimal infrastructure on the Irish border in order to push through a final Brexit deal.

"The idea that the EU27 unity will break down is nonsense. I've seen nothing but support for the Irish position. Mainly because many smaller member states are thinking 'well, if they don't protect, will they every protect us?'

"The whole point of a union is strength through solidarity. That's the purpose of it. I can't honestly see that situation ever getting to a vote."

The MEP predicted that Britain will remain in transition for years beyond the proposed 20-month timeframe.

"We'll never get out of transition in my view," he said.

"You'll still have Rees-Mogg throwing things in the Thames and Farage saying it's a betrayal. You'll still have divide in the Tory party and questions about the Irish border.

"We'll get to the end of transition and say 'hey, we are nowhere near ready to end this' and end up extending transition indefinitely. That's what Norway has done. Norway has effectively been transitioning out of the initial process of joining what was then the ECC for decades. They can't get out because there's no alternative."

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